Treatment failure and survival in 209 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the floor of the mouth treated with surgery as the single curative modality are reported. Fifty percent of the patients had stage III and IV disease. The primary tumor was excised with 1 to 2 cm margins and the mandible was resected in 73 percent of the patients; 77 percent underwent radical neck dissection. No cures were observed in 11 patients with involved surgical margins on permanent section. For 198 patients with uninvolved margins, determinate survival at 5 years for all stages was 49 percent and 69, 64, 46, and 26 percent for stages I through IV (p less than 0.01). The most common sites of initial and ultimate treatment failure were the neck (42 of 72 patients) and distant metastases (33 of 53 patients), respectively. Treatment of the neck is identified as an unresolved problem in the management of early stage disease. Recent improvements in survival for stage III and IV disease are accounted for, in part, by adequate surgical resection.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9610(89)90118-9 | DOI Listing |
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